How so? Can a bacterium survive without blood clotting? How about a small multicellular organism?
Do they have blood? It would follow that without blood blood clotting is irrelevant.
The blood clotting system is a product of evolution. Natural selection is a part of evolution hence natural selection is invoved in the development of the blood clotting system.
Well, that’s your faith. So far your reasoning does not support that.
What is most scary is that you do not seem to be sorry that you posted an obvious error about who called Professor Behe to testify, and you posted it without even bothering to check your facts first. To me that seems to show a contempt for the truth. If you are unsure of something then check your facts first before posting. By now you should have worked out that I do check facts and I will pull you up when I spot one of your errors.
Really? Can you go back and actually read my post? Can you read between the lines? Here, let me tell you in black and white: it’s called sarcasm.
Nothing at all. If you had read Behe’s book “Darwin’s Black Box” you would have seen that Behe supported common descent and much of evolution from well before the Dover trial. Behe’s testimony shows that he accepts that Irreducibly Complex system can evolve, and that his own work confirms this.
Those seem to be his *personal *views. He basically says he finds “no reason not to believe in common descent” but he goes on to show how incremental step-by-step Darwinian evolution is improbable for ICs. Regardless, that is irrelevant to our discussion.
Your logical assertion is faulty. I said that we have observed the evolution of irreducible complexity. We have seen it actually happening. In science reality wins every time. Your logic fails because reality beats faulty logic.
Again with the story telling? Have you any idea how complex eukaryotic cells are? If you think my reasoning is faulty you have to reasonably show how.
No, given your apparent level of knowledge in not knowing what the phrase “scientific literature” meant, I thought that Wikipedia would be an appropriate site to point you at initially.
Ha! Your level of not being able to carry out a rational discussion is showing. Vitriolic nonsense doesn’t help you here.
What is a critical component for us is entirely absent in hagfish so it is not critical for them. The complex system is built in stages by adding a new non-critical part, usually through a duplication, and then tinkering with the system so that the new part becomes critical. IC systems can be built in steps, read Behe and Snoke (2004) for some calculations on how to build a simple IC system is steps - yes it is the same Behe.
I believe Behe stated it was highly unlikely which is why the need for ID. Do you spend time actually reading his stuff? I think it’s pretty good as he has a good grasp of the evidence without all the speculative nonsense.
Deleterious mutations will disappear. Neutral mutations will drift (look up the meaning of “neutral drift” in this context). Beneficial mutations will spread. You are working on a very old version of IC that Professor Behe has now abandoned.
Actually, Professor Behe’s name shows up on the dissent from Darwin list. If you look around a bit you should be able to find that information. And yes, deleterious mutations will disappear and do you know why? Because it is a duplication that is ultimately guided by the genome.
Your ignorance of both evolution and of IC is showing. Think of a car. Early cars did not have starter motors, they were started with a hand crank. Later, starter motors were added as a convenience.
Now you’ve just shot yourself in the foot there while showing an incomplete understanding of how engineering and car design works. Tell me, the modern car, did it come from a gradual step-by-step improvement of a hand cranked car? Cars have come a long way since the nascent days of car building! The technology has improved because we have renovated designs and better raw materials. A gradual step-by-step improvement of a hand cranked car is no where near at the level of the car I own today. Think of the many improvements that have been added notwithstanding what the first car had: plastics, metal alloys, fuel injection, automatic transmission, suspension, computers, etc., the list goes on and on. All of these were not necessarily improvements but spontaneous new features that the cranked car could have only dreamed of.
@tjm190: I recommend to go back and watch buffalo’s video that he posted. It shows the evidence for intelligent design and the best part is: the arguments actually make sense and you don’t have to put your faith in ‘science’.